Showing posts with label youtube. Show all posts
Showing posts with label youtube. Show all posts

Monday, 25 April 2011

TRIBECA 2011: FLOWERS OF EVIL

Gecko (Rachid Youcef) in Flowers of Evil.
Smells like stream spirit

By Don Simpson

Gecko (Rachid Youcef) is a traceur (a practitioner of parkour) and breakdancer who works as a bellhop at a Parisian hotel. Living alone in an isolated apartment within earshot of the roaring sounds of the major highway it overlooks, Gecko spends much of his spare time on Facebook and YouTube. Recently Gecko has developed an interest in traffic, which in turn draws his attention towards the traffic problems in Iran. 

It is not without coincidence that Gecko meets Anahita (Alice Belaïdi), a young Iranian student whose parents have sent her to Paris to avoid the repressive fallout from the political uprisings in Tehran. Anahita relies solely upon social media -- Twitter, Facebook and YouTube -- to keep up to date with her family, friends and the overall situation in Iran; this quickly evolves into a compulsive and all-consuming desire to constantly check the Internet for any and all updates related to Iran.

To serve as a distraction from Anahita's obsession with Iran, Gecko agrees to be Anahita's Parisian tour guide. They quickly evolve into lovers, but their relationship is not without complications. Anahita finds herself torn between her life of freedom and happiness in Paris and the extreme guilt associated with running away from the atrocities in Iran. Life in Paris is a constant push-pull for Anahita, and Gecko finds himself stuck in the middle of it all. Gecko enjoys Anahita's loving nature but also must suffer the brunt of Anahita's outrage.

Gecko tries to convert Anahita to his personal philosophy -- to live in the here and now. Gecko relishes in his "freedom," which essentially means having no familial or political ties to the world; he wants Anahita to enjoy the same freedoms. Despite Gecko's countless objections, Anahita cannot resist knowing that constant updates are merely a click away on her smart phone.

Writer-director David Dusa builds Flowers of Evil around the plethora of YouTube videos documenting the failed uprising in Iran following the 2009 presidential elections. Dusa cleverly cuts back and forth between Anahita and Gecko in Paris and the YouTube footage of the events in Iran, as if to visualize Anahita's thoughts and concerns. Dusa illustrates how Facebook and YouTube can expands one's horizons, providing limitless information, but can also be distractive and destructive to one's organic relationships.

Named after a compilation of poetry by Charles Baudelaire that deals primarily with themes of decadence and eroticism, Flowers of Evil features multiple instances that Anahita and Gecko recite passages from Baudelaire's book. Along with several historically significant locations, the mid-19th century poetry serves as a grounding for this otherwise lofty postmodern diatribe on the effects that new media and perpetual connectedness has on people's relationships. Baudelaire's words bring Anahita and Gecko closer together as technology tries to form a wedge between them. 

It seems appropriate that I viewed Flowers of Evil via streaming video on my 8” netbook screen. The film works remarkably well in a small visual format, with headphones on. I suspect the poor video quality of the YouTube footage might have annoyed me if I saw it projected on a theatrical screen and I wonder how much of the minutia of the sound design (such as the stereophonic sounds of traffic) would have been lost in a large arena. That said, my extremely personal experience with Flowers of Evil was an extravaganza of sound and vision. Dusa's footage -- especially of Youcef's parkour routines -- is absolutely incredible, as is the soundtrack; all the while the grainy and blurry distortion of the YouTube adds a certain avant garde aesthetic to Flowers of Evil. Sure, I wish Dusa's message was not so politically apathetic (Gecko seems to me to be the more sympathetic character in Flowers of Evil), but he deserves tremendous credit for utilizing visual techniques that perfectly complement the narrative.

Thursday, 21 April 2011

LA COMEDY SHORTS FILM FESTIVAL 2011: WRAP-UP

A scene from Elephant Larry Presents the Wow.
Ha!

By Allan Heifetz

In this age of Funny or Die and YouTube there can be only two kinds of comedy short: ones that can go viral and ones that will die alone. If your recent funny video has had the latter experience-- just like the one I recently made (more on that later), there's will always be a short film festival like the L.A. Comedy Shorts Film Festival that will show it if it's halfway decent.
I was only able to attend for one day (April 8) and had to miss the star studded events of the next two days. I started my day at the festival with two panel discussions about how to make money by producing comedy for the web. The panelists all seemed like such caring nurturers, ready to throw money and time at your silliest ideas. Execs like Lindsay Goffman, Manager of Comedy and Drama Development at FreMantle, and Walter Newman from Cartoon Network/Adult Swim, talked a lot about how they're dying for new comedic talent and constantly trolling the web for the latest thing. So, I gathered in the end that the only hard part of becoming a web comedy sensation is getting people to watch your shit. What a shocker.

I recently put up a funny video on Funny or Die, but I somehow doubt Will Ferrell or Adam McKay has caught it. My poor video just hangs there, ignored by the comedy intelligentsia, friends and family. What went wrong? Well first off, I don't have any friends or connections and I dont Twitter.

Anyway, it was a bit jarring that after so much web and "viral" talk from the panels that most of the short films screened that day were completely web unfriendly, especially the ones over two minutes long. Attending a short film festival can be an awkward experience. You have the two-minute films competing against the 25-minute ones. You must suffer through every unnecessary credit sequence in silence and then give a final courtesy clap afterwards. The Downtown Independent Theater had a sweet, big screen projection system, but this didn't do the many TV parody videos any service since they belong on a TV and not blown up huge so we can see every pixel.

I do love me some commercial parody shit and I was glad to see the anarchic and surreal parodic stylings of Tim and Eric featured in so many entries. Films like VCR to Cash, It's Elementary! Gardening with Marty Chang and especially the 20-minute entertainment show/infomercial, Elephant Larry Presents The Wow, managed to be super sharp with tons of psychotic energy to burn.

Many short comedy films are made by bored actors who are inspired to pool their talents, call in some favors and shoot pieces that provide a showcase for themselves and their pals. The actor-based short can be a mixed bag; the performances are often strong but the actual ideas behind it all are usually less than original. Films like Hip, Conversations a Bench, Genius Improv School, Withstand One Night, A Date With Diana and Try Hard all boasted funny and winning performances but the concepts all lacked spark. Only the two minute, L.A.-specific, Undocumented Worker: The Audition managed to be well acted, funny, adorable and fresh at the same time.

So at least now I know how to market my next funny video. I just have to get a handful of famous people to see it and Twitter about it to a million close friends.